Critically derided movies turn into cult classics despite — or maybe because — they're poorly made. Everyone has different tastes when it comes to comedy, so films like "The Replacements" and "Soul Plane" still have their fans. And no matter how much critics despise them, exploitative low-budget horror films have always found an audience.

Metacritic provided INSIDER with data about which movies since the year 2000 have most divided critics and regular viewers, looking at titles with high user scores but very low critic averages.

Check out Metacritic's 50 movies that people love but critics hate, ranked from least divergent critic and user scores to most divergent:

John Lynch contributed to a previous version of this article.

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50. "Soul Plane" (2004)

Plot summary: After a humiliating and horrific experience on a commercial flight, Nashawn Wade (Kevin Hart) sues and is awarded a $100 million settlement. Determined to make good with his newfound wealth he decides to create the airline of his dreams.

What critics said: "An hour and a half of real airplane turbulence is better than sitting through the bad, offensive material that makes up 'Soul Plane.'" — The Washington Post

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49. "Self/less" (2015)

Plot summary: An extremely wealthy man (Ben Kingsley) dying from cancer undergoes a radical medical procedure that transfers his consciousness into the body of a healthy young man (Ryan Reynolds). But all is not as it seems when he starts to uncover the mystery of the body's origin and the organization that will kill to protect its cause.

What critics said: "'Self/less' is a celluloid smoothie blended from dozens of familiar elements, but it's neither tasty nor nutritious." — New York Post

3/

48. "Sweet November" (2001)

Plot summary: Nelson (Keanu Reeves) and Sara (Charlize Theron) have nothing in common except an hour spent in DMV hell. Intrigued by each other, but not quite ready to commit, they settle on a rather unconventional courtship: a one-month trial, after which they'll go their separate ways.

What critics said: "Passes off pathological behavior as romantic bliss. It's about two sick and twisted people playing mind games and calling it love." — Chicago Sun-Times

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47. "American Outlaws" (2001)

Plot summary: When a Midwest town learns that a corrupt railroad baron has captured the deeds to their homesteads without their knowledge, a group of young ranchers join forces to take back what is rightfully theirs.

What critics said: "There's no escaping the hackneyed plot or Mayfield's conventional hand. So don't go." — The Washington Post

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46. "Down to Earth" (2001)

Plot summary: When amateur comedian Lance (Chris Rock) finds himself at heaven's door, he is convinced that there has been a mistake. Miraculously, he is right. He is given another chance — but in another body.

What critics said: "For a comedy, there are precious few real laughs. Three to be exact." — The Washington Post

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45. "Sex Ed" (2014)

Plot summary: Ed (Haley Joel Osment) lands his first teaching gig at an inner city middle school and finds his highly pubescent pupils are receiving no form of sexual education. Eddie isn't really equipped to teach them. He's not exactly experienced romantically.

What critics said: "While Isaac Feder's raunchy comedy gives the 'Sixth Sense' star the opportunity to roll a condom over a banana and talk really dirty, it offers precious little to even the most undemanding audiences." — The Hollywood Reporter

43. "Surviving Christmas" (2004)

Plot summary: Facing another Christmas alone, Drew Latham (Ben Affleck) decides to go back to his idyllic childhood home to recall the family holidays of his youth. There is, however, one problem: the people living there now are not Drew's family.

What critics said: "This ghastly comedy emits the subliminal whine of a sucking chest wound." — The Village Voice

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42. "Just Before I Go" (2015)

Plot summary: Ted Morgan (Seann William Scott) has been treading water for most of his life. After his wife leaves him, Ted realizes he has nothing left to live for. Summoning the courage for one last act, Ted decides to go home and face the people he feels are responsible for creating the shell of a person he has become.

What critics said: "The film falters when it ham-fistedly attempts to detour into sensitive drama." — The Hollywood Reporter

10/

41. "Pali Road" (2016)

Plot summary: A young doctor (Michelle Chen) wakes up from a car accident and discovers she is married to another man and living a life she can't remember. Her search for the truth to her past life will lead her to question everyone around her and her entire existence.

39. "Black Knight" (2001)

Plot summary: Jamal Walker (Martin Lawrence) toils, unhappily, at Medieval World, a theme park that looks like it has not been renovated, or had customers, since the Dark Ages. After falling into the park's fetid moat, Jamal crawls out into fourteenth century England. The Middle Ages will never be the same.

What critics said: "There's precious little to like about the witless and decidedly tedious 'Black Knight' other than the fact that it's unlikely to generate a sequel." — Austin Chronicle

36. "Antitrust" (2001)

Plot summary: A relentless suspense thriller that enters the hidden world where the rich and the brilliant collide, where a handful of bright, driven young men and women have the means to make or break the technology that will dominate the global economy.

35. "Corky Romano" (2001)

Plot summary: Good-natured veterinarian Corky Romano (Chris Kattan) is stunned when he receives a call from his long-lost father "Pops" (Peter Falk), an underworld crime lord who has been indicted by a grand jury and needs his black sheep son to infiltrate the FBI undetected and abscond with the evidence against him.

30. "Domestic Disturbance" (2001)

Plot summary: When a divorced father (John Travolta) discovers that his ex-wife's new husband (Vince Vaughn) is not what he claims to be, he realizes that his son's life may be in danger and is determined to save him.

What critics said: "The most surprising thing about the movie is that somebody bothered to make it in the first place." — The Washington Post

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29. "Deception" (2008)

Plot summary: A simple enough question, but how Jonathan McQuarry answers it will change his life forever. A corporate auditor adrift in a sea of New York's power elite, Jonathan's work is his entire life. But a chance meeting with Wyatt Bose, a charismatic corporate lawyer, introduces Jonathan to a decadent playground for Manhattan's executive upper crust.

27. "Grind" (2003)

Plot summary: While the rest of his high school graduating class is heading to the same old grind of college, skateboarder Eric Rivers and his best friends, Dustin (Adam Brody), a goal-oriented workaholic, and misfit slacker Matt have one last summer road trip together to follow their dream of getting noticed by the professional skateboarding world — and getting paid to skate.

26. "The Punisher" (2004)

Plot summary: Marvel's unstoppable vigilante hits the big screen. After losing his family in to mob violence, undercover FBI agent and former Marine Frank Castle (Thomas Jane) decides to dedicate himself fully to the eradication of crime from America.

24. "She Hate Me" (2004)

Plot summary: When biotech executive Jack Armstrong (Anthony Mackie) gets fired and branded a whistle-blower, his desperation to make a living and the suggestion of a former girlfriend lead him into the baby-making business. Between the attempts by his former employers to frame him for securities fraud and his dubious fathering activities, Jack finds life, all at once, becoming very complicated

What critics said: "'She Hate Me' manages to be at once racist, homophobic, utterly fake, and unbearably tedious. This time, it's Spike Lee who's doing the bamboozling." — Entertainment Weekly

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23. "The Quiet" (2006)

Plot summary: Popular cheerleader Nina Deer's (Cuthbert) world is turned upside down when her parents (Falco and Donovan) adopt a recently orphaned deaf girl, Dot (Belle). But in this suburban home, things are not what they seem. Dot's arrival puts a crack in Nina's idyllic social life and the dark secrets her family harbors soon become exposed.

What critics said: "Neither ambitious enough to take seriously nor sleazy enough to enjoy, 'The Quiet' flirts with the trappings of exploitation cinema without going all the way." — The New York Times

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22. "The Replacements" (2000)

Plot summary: It's late in the season; the playoffs are fast approaching; and the Washington Sentinels have just gone on strike. Scrambling for a solution, the owner Edward O'Neil hatches a plan to bring in legendary coach Jimmy McGinty (Gene Hackman) to recruit a team of replacement players in exactly one week.

What critics said: "In a summer filled with dumb comedies, this might prove to be the dumbest. Think 'Road Trip' meets 'City Slickers.' Then dial the humor down a few notches, and you're left 'Without a Paddle.'" — USA Today

18. "Branded" (2012)

Plot summary: "Branded" is a dark and mind-bending journey into a surreal, dystopian society where corporate brands have unleashed a monstrous global conspiracy to get inside our minds and keep the population disillusioned, dependent, and passive.

16. "Half Past Dead" (2002)

Plot summary: An undercover agent (Steven Seagal) must try to stop a criminal mastermind (Morris Chestnut) who plans to infiltrate a high-tech super-prison to persuade a man on death row to tell him where he hid $200 million in gold.

What critics said: "Stupid. Illogical. Simplistic. Pandering. And those are its good points." — Baltimore Sun

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15. "Sorority Row" (2009)

Plot summary: When five sorority girls inadvertently cause the murder of one of their sisters in a prank gone wrong, they agree to keep the matter to themselves and never speak of it again, so they can get on with their lives.

12. "Ready to Rumble" (2000)

Plot summary: An unscrupulous promoter removes a wrestler from his line-up, and two of the biggest wrestling fans are devastated by the ousting of their favorite character.

What critics said: "A movie made for wrestling fans that makes fun of wrestling fans? That cuts a little too close to the vicarious masochism at the heart of pro wrestling's core constituency. Also, it's not funny." — Los Angeles Times

4. "Bad Kids of Crestview Academy" (2017)

Plot summary: A new group of students has been placed in Saturday detention at the infamous and prestigious Crestview Academy. When Siouxsie, sophomore 'undercrust,' crashes the party to avenge her sister's death, a Saturday detention reserved for the privileged seniors of Crestview Academy turns into a date in hell.

What critics said: "Why does this movie exist and how does it succeed in failing on every level?" — Los Angeles Times